Units: By default, values are displayed in billions of dollars. By using a dropdown control in the table heading you can select millions of dollars, percent of GDP, percent of federal total, percent of overall total, dollars per capita of population, and thousand dollars per capita of population.

Fiscal Year: The default year displayed is the current US government fiscal year. But you can select any year you want using the dropdown control in the table heading. At the top and bottom of the dropdown only years ending in 0 are shown. Select a year to get close, then select the year you want. You can increase or decrease the year using the yr text links in the table heading.

US Budget Year: By default, the table displays budgeted and estimated numbers in the current US Budget submitted to the Congress by the president. But you can look at previous budgeted numbers using the dropdown control at the bottom of the table.

State and Local Revenue: By default, state and local revenue are displayed separately. But you can select state'n local and display state and local revenue combined.

US or State: By default, the table shows values for governments in the United States overall. But you can select individual states by selecting the state dropdown control in the table heading or the text link right above it.

Pie Chart: Click on a pie icon to display a pie chart. You can create a pie chart for federal, state and local, and overall revenue.

The table shows overall government receipts for the specified fiscal year. Revenue totals are aggregated for each major source of revenue.

For the United States the table shows receipts for all levels of governmentfederal revenue, state revenue, and local revenue.

For individual states the table shows receipts for state and local governments only.

Federal receipts for 1962 and after are based on federal data on receipts in the
presidents budget.
State and local receiptsboth for the United States as a whole and for individual statesfor 1992 and after are derived from spending, revenue, and debt data in the
Census Bureaus
census of state and local government finances.

You can use controls on the table to change the year or to drill down to view
more detailed revenue information. You can also view the revenue data as percent of
Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Click the button at the right of each line of the table to display a bar chart of government revenues.
You can right click on the chart image to copy and paste the image into your own content. Click
the image to close the bar chart display.

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Click button to download CSV file of data in table

Tab-delimited Table

Notes

Actual vs. Budgeted:
Government revenue data in usgovernmentrevenue.com includes historical revenue and also future revenue in
three categories: budgeted, estimated, and guesstimated. Records of recent revenue are more detailed than historical
records of earlier times.

Government Revenue Updates:
The last update to federal revenue was made in April 2013. The last update to state revenue was made
in December 2012. The last update to local government revenue was made in July 2011.

Typically, federal revenue is updated from the presidents budget each February. State and local revenue is updated when published by the US Census Bureau, in the fall for the previous years state revenue (e.g., November 2012 for 2011 revenue) and in the early summer for local revenue (e.g., July 2012 for 2010 revenue).

On June16, 2015, the Congressional Budget Office released its annual Long Term Budget Outlook for 2015, which projects federal spending and revenue out into the 2080s. As before, the CBO study shows that federal health-care programs will eat the budget, with federal spending exceeding 35 percent GDP by the end of the century while federal revenue stays below 25 percent GDP.

UsGovernmentspending.com has updated its chart of the CBO Long Term Budget Outlook here. You can download the data and also view CBO Long Term Budget Outlooks going back to 1999.